#SixonSaturday My Gardening Week – 29th October

Garden AllotmentSix on Saturday is a weekly meme orignally hosted by The Propagator but now in the tender care of Jim at Garden Ruminations. If you can find the time, do check out the posts by other participants or share your own six.

As we approach November and the clocks going back, it seems like a good time to highlight some of the plants that are still flowering their hearts out. In fact, some of them are flowering for the second time this year.

Six on Saturday 291022One – The rosemary bushes (right) have started flowering again, much to the delight of the bees. I spent a lovely few days in Falmouth recently and spotted a rosemary with a much darker blue flower in the garden of the hotel where we were staying so of course I nicked a cutting.

Six on Saturday 2 291022Two – The choiysa (left) also has a second flush of flowers. It has pretty much taken over one corner of the garden between the hawthorn hedge and a crab apple tree so it is overdue for some taming.

Six on Saturday 3 291022Three – Despite giving it a drastic chop back a month or so ago in an attempt to give it a better shape (or perhaps because of) this bay laurel (right) is covered with beautifully scented flowers.

Six on Saturday 4 291022Four – The Japanese anemones (left) can be relied upon to deliver some late colour to the garden. They spread everywhere but I tend to leave them, especially as they are a pain to dig out.

Six on Saturday 5 291022Five – I have no idea how this cyclamen (right) found its way into the garden and managed to make itself at home at the edge of a gravel path but I’m glad it did. And yes, I should have cleared away the leaves from the hazel before taking the picture.

Six – Finally, back to Cornwall and some pampas grass growing beside the path overlooking Gyllyngvase beach. Enjoy your garden or outside space this week.

Six on Saturday 6 291022

#BookReview Rivals of the Republic by Annelise Freisenbruch

RivalsoftheRepublicAbout the Book

Rome, 70BC. Roman high society hums with gossip about the suspicious suicide of a prominent Roman senator and the body of a Vestal Virgin is discovered in the river Tiber.

As the authorities turn a blind eye, Hortensia is moved to investigate a trail of murders that appear to lead straight to the dark heart of the Eternal City.

Format: Paperback (288 pages)          Publisher: Duckworth
Publication date: 10th August 2017  Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime

Find Rivals of the Republic (Blood of Rome #1) on Goodreads

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My Review

In Rivals of the Republic the author has taken actual historical events and characters, including well-known figures such as Cicero, Pompey and even a young Julius Caesar, and used her imagination to weave an intriguing and dramatic story around them. And don’t worry about getting confused because the book includes a dramatis personae in case you need a reminder of who everyone is.

The book’s female protagonist, Hortensia, was a real person although little is known about her beyond the fact she was the daughter of renowned lawyer Hortensius Hortalus. But when it comes to historical fiction, a gap is something authors love because they can use their imagination to fill it, as Annelise Freisenbruch has done here. The author’s Hortensia is a young woman of noble birth who is intelligent, has inherited the rhetorical skills of her father and possesses an independence of spirit that makes her challenge the conventions and limitations of patriarchal Roman society. The role of a woman like Hortensia is to make a marriage that is advantageous to her family, increasing their wealth or influence. They are certainly not expected to appear in the law court as Hortensia does in one particularly entertaining scene in which her inspired defence of a wronged woman proves she is more than equal to any male opponent.

The plot is intricate without being confusing and progresses at a good pace with plenty of twists and turns as it builds to an exciting conclusion. Although many of the characters are real life figures, there are a few fictional ones, notably a ‘boo hiss’ villian complete with scarred face and ‘strange amber eyes’. There is intrigue, conspiracy and political machinations conducted by individuals driven by a lust for power and wealth. They are utterly ruthless when it comes to ridding themselves of opponents. Luckily Hortensia finds a useful ally in ex-gladiator, Lurcio, and despite the difference in their social station they make a great partnership: a winning combination of brains and brawn.

The author has clearly used her knowledge of the period to cram the book with the sort of detail – of food, dress, social and religious customs – that makes a historical novel come alive.  There’s a clear sense of the gulf between the lives of noble families such as Hortensia’s and the experiences of ordinary people. For example, in this account of Lurcio’s visit to the Subura, a lower-class area of Rome notorious as a pleasure district.

‘There was no street lighting in the damp alleyways and few of the residents could afford the cost of a lantern-bearer to illuminate their way, but the beat of footsteps, the rattle of vehicles and the screech of voices had barely abated since the sun went down. The waft of hot chickpea soup and thick sausage stew from the cook shops competed with the stench from the underground sewer, tempting the custom of those who did not dare risk a cooking fire in the precipitous, decaying tenements that teetered like crumbling cliff-faces above the narrow streets.’

Although Rivals of the Republic was intended to be the first in the ‘Blood of Rome’ historical crime series, there have been no further instalments to date. (The author now writes children’s books under the name Annelise Gray.) This is a shame because, on the strength of Rivals of the Republic, I think it had the makings of a first-rate series sure to appeal to fans of historical crime fiction. Perhaps the author may come back to it at some point.

I received a review copy courtesy of Duckworth.

In three words: Intriguing, engaging, authentic

Try something similar: The Senator’s Assignment by Joan E. Histon


Annelise GrayAbout the Author

Annelise Freisenbruch received her PhD in Classics from Cambridge University. She has worked as a researcher for the BBC and has appeared in documentaries about ancient Rome for PBS and CNN. Her first book, The First Ladies of Rome: The Women behind the Caesars, was published to much critical acclaim and has been translated into eight languages. Rivals of the Republic is her first novel. (Photo: Author Twitter profile)

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